By , Published: July 20, 2022

Banner image: Players speed around in a game called "Lightcycles" on a pair of Tinycade platforms. (Credit: Peter Gyory)

Like many people across Colorado, Peter Gyory spent the height of the COVID-19 pandemic sitting at home with nothing to do. Then the researcher, a game designer by training, noticed all the random materials he had lying around his house.

鈥淚 was really frustrated that I couldn鈥檛 make games,鈥 said Gyory, a doctoral student at 兔子先生传媒文化作品鈥檚 ATLAS Institute. 鈥淚 realized I was surrounded by cardboard. I thought: 鈥楬ow could I make a game out of that?鈥欌

That was the . This project, the brainchild of Gyory and his colleagues at ATLAS, brings a do-it-yourself spirit to the world of video games. Tinycade allows anyone, anywhere to make a working arcade machine that can fit on a kitchen table or even a TV tray. All you need are a smartphone, some cardboard, two small mirrors and bric-a-brac like rubber bands and toothpicks. In other words: junk.

鈥淭he restriction I gave myself was that if you couldn鈥檛 go to the grocery store and buy it, I couldn鈥檛 use it in Tinycade,鈥 Gyory said.听

He last month at the Association for Computing Machinery鈥檚 in Venice, Italy.

Gyory and his colleagues still need to work through some kinks, but he invites interested gamers to connect to beta test the platform. Currently, he鈥檚 developing a series of initial games for Tinycade. They include Claw, a spin on the arcade classic game Space Invaders, and De Volta, a game that鈥檚 like 鈥減laying golf with a spaceship鈥 that he designed with in Canada.听

The team, however, hopes that one day the platform will allow players to come up with their own, never-before-seen ways for humans to immerse themselves in the digital world

鈥淲hen Peter and I go to conferences, he would show off all these different kinds of games: games where you鈥檙e riding a horse, fighting on a pirate ship,鈥 said Ellen Do, one of the team members behind Tinycade and a professor at ATLAS and the Department of Computer Science. 鈥淲hy should you have to use a standard keyboard interface for all of those games?鈥

Shot of the back of a Tinycade controller with digital markers printed out on paper

To operate Tinycade games, your phone's camera reads digital "markers" on the bottom听of cardboard controllers. (Credit: Peter Gyory)

Creative machines

It鈥檚 a theme for Do鈥檚 research group, which calls itself the ACME Lab鈥攁n allusion to the fictional cartoon company that makes everything from earthquake pills to dehydrated boulders.

鈥淲e make machines that help people be more creative,鈥 Do said.

Previously, Gyory and fellow doctoral student Clemet Zheng worked together to design a game called . In this video game, two players team up to pilot a pirate ship through dangerous waters鈥攖he twist is that players have to rapidly swap between a series of plastic controllers to stay afloat. A crank lowers the sails, a captain鈥檚 wheel makes the ship turn and a set of switches loads and fires the cannons.

鈥淲e wanted people to feel like they were fiddling around with the controller, and maybe even losing pieces in the process,鈥 Gyory said.

Space invading

Tinycade takes that tactile, DIY energy to a new level. 听

Once the platform rolls out, gamers will only need to follow a few simple steps: First, you will download a set of stencils that will help you to cut out and assemble an arcade machine from spare cardboard. You then plop your phone in to serve as the screen.

Click to enlarge

Tinycade controllers can come in many different shapes and sizes. (Credit: Peter Gyory)

The machine鈥檚 controllers are also made out of cardboard and can be configured into a wide range of designs鈥攆rom standard video game D-pads and joysticks to knobs, sliders, switches and much more. Within a Tinycade platform are a set of mirrors that allow your smartphone鈥檚 camera to see what鈥檚 going on under those controls. If you press right on the D-pad, say, the pieces will shift to reveal a digital 鈥渕arker,鈥 which looks like simple QR code. Your phone will spot that marker, then tell the character on screen to move right.听

鈥淚 would take the platform to conferences and lift out the controller to show what was inside,鈥 Gyory said. 鈥淭here was always this moment of realization that I loved where people would see how it worked.鈥

In the game Claw, which Gyory designed himself, players have to fight off a horde of oncoming alien ships. You slide around a cardboard claw, then pinch when you want to reach out and grab one of the enemy craft with a hook.听

The team, however, has a more ambitious vision for Tinycade: Gyory and his colleagues hope that users will soon be able to use the platform to make new types of controllers for any game they can think of.听

鈥淥nce this system is in place, we want players to be able to say, 鈥楬ere鈥檚 Pacman. Let鈥檚 make a new controller to move Pacman around,鈥欌 he said.听

Best of all, no quarters are required.听